We all know platforms like the Beagleboard, which are cheap hardware platforms which can be used in all sorts of projects. A new entry into this market is Raspberry Pi, a British ARM board which is slated to be released in the fourth quarter of this year. For a mere $25, you'll have a fully-configured ARM-based 1080p-capable mini-motherboard. The device is still in development, and only a few days ago, the alpha version of the board was demonstrated running Quake III.

I don't think that will be a problem for the Haiku team, as they are already using the more permissive MIT license anyway. They don't have to worry about X and all its problems either; they will hopefully be able to smoothly integrate whatever binary GPU blobs might be necessary.